This PO no well 🤣
No wonder they sent madam to come and tell people that Kulikuli, corn, and akara are lucrative businesses
They even went ahead to interview people making 2.5m monthly in gain from akara sales. Until e reach time to pay tax
"There is a way you fail in school, they will ask you to leave... Those who had business when he came to power are now the ones selling kulikuli."
-Peter Obi
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
I actually took Cowbell in primary school.
Didn't make it to National, 😆
For a person like me who loves and knows mathematics so well.
There are indeed geniuses.
Bro, if you see the kind of maths problems they set for them in Maths Olympiad ehn, you’d believe they’ve finished KA Stroud for th to be able to solve them.
Don’t even go far, have you seen Cowbell Maths competition questions?
Bro you won’t see most of those topics in ordinary maths textbooks.
I didn’t finish KA Stroud in secondary, but I studied it a lot and even started studying Advanced Engineering Maths (HK Dass) before I entered university. Though as an engineering student, I touched about 90% of the topics in both.
My closest buddy in university won cowbell national competition in jss3 and ss2.
The preparation led him to finish it. He entered the university with that same momentum and graduated with a first class.
If you submit Akara frying and roadside corn roasting business proposals to Tony Elumelu through his Foundation, they will shred your proposals because you will be seen as a moron who doesn't know what he/she is doing.
“The Crisis Started When I Refused His N12.5bn Demand" - DG Adeniyi
— DG Adeniyi says the Chief of Staff asked him for N12.5 billion and all the problem began when he refused to pay.
I will hardly trust any data that comes out of government if 8.8 trillion can be hidden
A plane landed on an expressway and people came down but the government can’t produce manifest of the plane ?
I don't agree, actually.
Maybe I'm used to a system that never fails, so it shapes how I think.
Addressing is very, very key to smooth delivery.
Try to read about Coupang. Or, in general terms, the Korean delivery system.
Korea had to develop their own map system, "Naver and Kakao," which is key to their whole navigation system. And because their addressing is so detailed, it is very hard or almost non-existent to mix up a package in delivery. Plus, institutionally, mail theft is a crime. So when you receive a package that doesn't bear your name, you best report it so it can be retrieved. Otherwise, if and when determined (they will definitely determine it) that you did a mail theft, you would be fined and it would be on record which would affect a lot of you as a person.
I dunno how well to explain but if you follow @Victorokeke_ and see his posts from time to time, he can best explain more.
“The PFIPC scandal can happen anywhere. It can happen in America. It is like 9-11.” - APC Chieftain.
A new bar has been set for the worst public spokesman to come on national TV. @charlesaniagolu wan slap am. 😂😂😂
Dr. Taofiq Raimi, come collect your medal. 🥇
All he did was absolve the Tinubu regime and blame it on Buhari. To what end? Is it because Buhari isn't alive anymore to speak for himself and his regime?
I'm trying to understand how these people reason because instead of them looking critically into what you are saying, they'll be behaving like the Moroccan defense team.
You’re so stupid . The Croatian government is giving grants as high as €10,000 to individuals yearly! Tax refunds as high as €1,000 once a year
Your government is giving you less than €60 to start akara business .
You’re a very stupid girl . Olodo oshi
A reform like this needs a better data collection strategy.
First, the best people to give an opinion are those in it.
We could set aside a full year for data collection to pass through all 3 batches and streams of the program.
Everyone in camp or going to camp has a phone or, at least, access to a device that can take a survey in Camp. If this were to have been done, each stream for each batch would have been mandated to fill the questionnaire in camp with an independent data collection system.
If all streams across all batches for 1 year does this, then we would have had robust data to back up a policy change as this, seeing that we might have over 30,000 to 50,000 responses from those whom are currently living the reality of the program.
Then, we can have other public members who have lived the reality to add up their opinions, alongside parents and others, hoping to go for service the year after we set aside for this survey.
The 10,000 survey data that produced this change is sparsely distributed, and worse still is that less than 50% of that dataset are actually those who are currently living the reality of it.
That being said, the dataset is not a true reflection of the desired change the people wish to see from the program, hence why it is generating so much heat.
It is not about a single post that people have missed. It's about deploying an aggressive data collection strategy with the same energy the politicians use in spreading rice and propaganda.
It is not too late to go back to the drawing board, in my opinion.
One of the biggest problems with us on this app is that we rarely pay attention to what truly matters. We are mostly drawn to whatever is trending or going viral.
When committees were calling for public opinions, many of us were too busy arguing about who was snubbed at a movie premiere or debating who was the bigger clown between Peller and Chicken or why did Theo Abu Agada call Peter Obi incompetent in the past.
Then, when the decisions are made, we suddenly become experts with endless complaints.
It's not about half wisdom.
He is a Dr, and if he is an academic one, he should know that the proposition lacks factual truth for implementation.
If you ever got your doctorate through academic research, you'll know that data is required to back up everything.
Where is the data backing up this proposition? Who is the audience used to arrive at it? What was the survey method that produced it?
We are pleased to announce that we have successfully uploaded the names and particulars of the African Democratic Congress (ADC) Presidential Candidate, Atiku Abubakar (GCON), and our Vice Presidential Candidate, Rotimi Amaechi (CON), to the nomination portal of the @INECNigeria.
This marks another important step in our preparations for the 2027 general election and our commitment to offer Nigerians a credible alternative built on competence, unity, and national renewal.
@atiku@ChibuikeAmaechi
Point made: DATA is King.
This is what research has imbibed in me. Before holding any opinion to be true or fact, there must be corresponding evidence grounded in truth.
This is the reason why the current government reforms don't hold water for those who try to defend it. It lacks ground evidence and truth to back it up.
This is one reason why Nigeria's public policies are always flawed.
With no disrespect to Dr. Joe himself, but policies shouldn't be based on individual ideas or what a group of elites considered progressive or "the brightest way of doing things".
It should be based on collected data, survey, democratic inputs and feedback from the populace. People sitting in an air conditioner filled room can't just assume what is best for the mass population in the country.
It's a monopolisation of abstract and pedestrian knowledge that no single human being or a group of politically privileged human beings can know.
On NYSC reforms, what's the data that show that the current system isn't working? And if any, where's the data that indicate that the new system will solve the identified problem? What research was carried? Where's the democratic input from the people who are currently in the system (the corp members)? Where's the feedback mechanism that made this new approach justifiable?
Without any of this, we just propose ideas that sound and look good on paper only for it to become adversely inapplicable to those who the ideas directly affected.
The same way I asked Mr. Oyedele then what data was driving his tax reform bill, and the proposed increment in VAT and CGT in the bill, only to have the host and the co-host kick me out of the space.
Our intellectual and political elites must be humble enough to know that not all ideas in their head are made of gold.
Else, we continue to fix what necessarily isn't broken.
This is one reason why Nigeria's public policies are always flawed.
With no disrespect to Dr. Joe himself, but policies shouldn't be based on individual ideas or what a group of elites considered progressive or "the brightest way of doing things".
It should be based on collected data, survey, democratic inputs and feedback from the populace. People sitting in an air conditioner filled room can't just assume what is best for the mass population in the country.
It's a monopolisation of abstract and pedestrian knowledge that no single human being or a group of politically privileged human beings can know.
On NYSC reforms, what's the data that show that the current system isn't working? And if any, where's the data that indicate that the new system will solve the identified problem? What research was carried? Where's the democratic input from the people who are currently in the system (the corp members)? Where's the feedback mechanism that made this new approach justifiable?
Without any of this, we just propose ideas that sound and look good on paper only for it to become adversely inapplicable to those who the ideas directly affected.
The same way I asked Mr. Oyedele then what data was driving his tax reform bill, and the proposed increment in VAT and CGT in the bill, only to have the host and the co-host kick me out of the space.
Our intellectual and political elites must be humble enough to know that not all ideas in their head are made of gold.
Else, we continue to fix what necessarily isn't broken.